Products:
RightCardWare - Creates and reads digital business cards and ID cards
RightFormWare - Creates and reads digital forms, letters, or any document, short letters, legal contracts
RightHealthWare - Creates and reads portable digital health records,
RightBuyWare - Ensures that licensed software or other digital content is used only by authorized users
Broad application includes:
Government: Identification cards (national ID, military ID, social services), motor vehicle licenses and registrations, public safety including citations, vehicle inspections, and accident reporting, logistics, official documents, border/passport, customs control, asset management
Retail: Manifesting for shipping and receiving, EDI, inventory control, direct mail marketing, shopper loyalty, returns, processing, warranty tracking
Transportation: Bills of lading, package tracking, EDI, shipping, manifests
Health: Laboratory requisition processing, specimen tracking, claims processing. identification cards, reagent calibration
Manufacturing: Process control, equipment calibration, asset tracking, hazardous material control, quality control, maintenance records, configuration management
2D barcode appears on various applications:
References:
- [Elfun 1976]
The General Electric Story, Volume 1: The Edison Era. Schenectady, NY: Elfun Society, 1976. Cited: Digital Stationery: The Mission (p. 1)
- [Grant 1998]
L. Grant. The Business Card Book. Scottsdale, AZ: Off the Page Press, 1998. Cited: RightCardWare: Creates and Reads Digital Business Cards
- [Hirsh 2002]
L. Hirsh. Cutting-edge communications: pen and paper. Newsfactor. 20-Mar-2002. Online at http://www.newsfactor.com. Cited: Digital Stationery: The Mission (p. 1)
- [Hirsh 2002 Inkjet]
L. Hirsh. Inkjet process suggests wide spectrum of innovations. Newsfactor. 28-Mar-2002. Online at http://www.newsfactor.com. Cited: Digital Stationery: The Mission (p. 1)
- [Holch 2001]
K. Holch. Scanner market reaches maturity – penetration nearing one third of U.S. PC households. InfoTrends. 19-Jun-2001. Online at http://www.infotrends-rgi.com/press/2001061971766.html. Cited: Digital Stationery: The Mission (p. 2)
- [Machrone PCM]
B. Machrone. The business card standard. PC Magazine. 12-Sep-1995. 14 (15). Cited: The Right Home Page: RightCardWare Products & Services | Why. After we had crafted the initial version of RightCardWare™, our research uncovered this gem by Bill Machrone, who independently articulates strong reasons why digital business cards provide the compelling alternative to OCR-based scanning. We elaborate these points in Digital Stationery: The Mission
- [Mann 2001]
C. C. Mann. Electronic paper turns the page. Technology Review. Mar-2001. pp. 42 - 48. Online at http://www.TechnologyReview.com. Cited: Digital Stationery: The Mission (p. 1)
- [McAllister 2001]
N. McAllister. Can digital media match the longevity of plain old paper? SF Gate, San Francisco Chronicle. 8-May-2001. Online at http://www.sfgate.com. Cited: Digital Stationery: The Mission (p. 1)
- [Mell 2001]
P. Mell. Paper-free world won’t be nirvana. Government Computer News. 20 (33), 19-Nov-2001. Online at http://www.gcn.com/20_33/interview/17499-1.html. Cited: Digital Stationery: The Mission (p. 1)
- [NY Jnl 1897 Twain Quotes]
Usually misquoted as, "Reports of my death have been greatly exaggerated”, Samuel Langhorn Clemens, a.k.a. Mark Twain, actually penned “… the report of my death was an exaggeration”, in a May, 1897 note to the New York Journal. The Journal, which had transmogrified news of the illness of Twain’s cousin, James Ross Clemens, into that of Twain’s death, evidently printed Twain’s correction on 2-Jun-1897. Cf. http://www.twainquotes.com/Death.html and http://lawlibrary.ucdavis.edu/LAWLIB/jun95/0578.html. Cited: Digital Stationery: The Mission (p. 1)
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